Article Length: 8-12 pages
Font: Times Roman. Size: 10
Title: Should be very clear and brief to the work reported and should not contain more than 4 lines.
Author(s): Name(s) of the author(s), affiliation/addresses and e-mails id(s).
Abstract: Not more than 250 words highlighting the scope, objective, methodology, significance of the research work and conclusion.
Keywords: 2-6. Each keyword should not contain more than three words.
Text: Should contain scope, objective of the research work, introduction, methodology used, analysis and conclusion.
Paragraph: Should
be serially numbers as 1, 1.1, 1.1.2, Tables, figures, photos, images
and charts may be given only if necessary and numbered consecutively in
Roman Numerals.
Conclusion: Summary of the reported work.
Reference: Follow the "IEEE Citation Reference".
Examples:
Books
[1] M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, Eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions (Applied Mathematics Series 55). Washington, DC: NBS, 1964, pp. 32-33.
Journals
[1] R. E. Kalman, "New results in linear filtering and prediction theory," J. Basic Eng., ser. D, vol. 83, pp. 95-108, Mar. 1961.
Note: Use et al. when three or more names are given.
Online Sources
[1] J. Jones. (1991, May 10). Networks (2nd ed.)
[Online]. Available: http://www.atm.com
Please visit IEEE website for more details @ http://www.ieee.org/documents/ieeecitationref.pdf
References in Text: References need not be cited in the text. When they are, they appear on the line, in square brackets, inside the punctuation. Grammatically, they may be treated as if they were footnote numbers.
[1] M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, Eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions (Applied Mathematics Series 55). Washington, DC: NBS, 1964, pp. 32-33.
Journals
[1] R. E. Kalman, "New results in linear filtering and prediction theory," J. Basic Eng., ser. D, vol. 83, pp. 95-108, Mar. 1961.
Note: Use et al. when three or more names are given.
Online Sources
[1] J. Jones. (1991, May 10). Networks (2nd ed.)
[Online]. Available: http://www.atm.com
Please visit IEEE website for more details @ http://www.ieee.org/documents/ieeecitationref.pdf
References in Text: References need not be cited in the text. When they are, they appear on the line, in square brackets, inside the punctuation. Grammatically, they may be treated as if they were footnote numbers.